Salvation Army to help Deter Olympics Sex Traffickers

As Christians prepare to welcome the athletes and spectators who will be coming to Vancouver and Whistler from across the globe to attend the 2010 Winter Olympics next February, there is one group of potential visitors that they will be working just as hard to keep out: those who sell children and women for sex.

Major Brian Venables, The Salvation Army’s divisional secretary for public relations and development, calls the prospect of a significant upsurge in prostitution “an underbelly to Vancouver being on the world stage.” He adds: “The number of prostitutes doubles when the world comes to your community, and we want to make sure that doesn’t happen here.”

British Columbia already has a problem with sexual exploitation and human trafficking that the influx of upwards of one-million visitors will only exacerbate, says University of British Columbia law professor Benjamin Perrin. “And we’re talking here about victims of both domestic sex trafficking — Canadians — as well as international victims.”

“Some of the networks or the routes that have been historically [used] to traffic narcotics or weapons are now the same distribution systems for the trafficking in human flesh,” says Jamie McIntosh, executive director of International Justice Mission Canada.” And if it can happen globally, there’s no reason why the same thing cannot happen domestically.”

Traffickers “come on as being their friends . . . supplying them with what they need, whether it’s food, shelter, drugs, whatever. But they’re not their friends at all,” says Manitoba Conservative MP Joy Smith herself a Christian. “They get them away from their support systems, their parents or their friends. Then they traffic them.”

By some estimates, there are currently between 1,500 and 2,000 prostitutes working in Vancouver. Some prostitutes and pimps are said to be as young as 13.

The lure of these international venues to traffickers, says McIntosh, is “the obscene levels of profit that are made off of the trafficking of persons.”

Human trafficking, he asserts, “is starting to compete for number two on the order of profits for organized criminal activity, globally. It’s drug-trafficking [first], then many estimates put human trafficking next — at somewhere in the neighbourhood of between $13.6 billion to $32 billion annually. That’s not pocket change.”

And despite the volume and extent of this illicit trade in human flesh, it remains a largely covert activity. “Most of them,” says Venables, “are trafficked in hotels and private houses, and they’re accessed through the Internet or services that provide these things.”

“Victims have been advertised on Craig’s List,” Perrin adds. “Victims have been exploited in hotel chains that we all stay at. We’ve confirmed both of those findings through our research.”

Plans by Christians to confront the problem are taking the form of a two-pronged attack: reducing the supply of children and women who can fall prey to traffickers; and lessening the demand for sex with prostitutes.

On the supply side, the Canadian Religious Conference (CRC), an association of 290 leaders of Catholic religious congregations, has produced an educational kit for high school students called ‘We are a Global Village — Human Trafficking and the 2010 Olympics.’ It includes a dramatic presentation on DVD called The Oldest Oppression; a PowerPoint presentation; two 60-minute lessons; and a lesson plan for teachers.

“We wanted to get the high school students more aware of the issue. We believe that’s where the energy is in terms of advocacy and making change,” says Dave Bouchard, a CRC field worker in Red Deer, Alberta, who completed the project. “Also, this is the age group that a lot of the traffickers are targeting. And so with their awareness, then they are able to respond in kind and say, ‘Hey, I’m not going to fall into that trap.'”

Although the presentation is geared toward teenagers, Bouchard insists that other groups can use it as well — and have already done so successfully. Nor is it just for Catholics.

“We’re doing an ecumenical approach,” he says, noting: “There are a couple of things in it that are Catholic in particular — two slides of the PowerPoint.” He tells non-Catholic presenters: “Just skip over those two slides, if they’re uncomfortable for you.”

For its part, the Salvation Army is preparing a brochure on human trafficking and training the people who will hand it out. It also plans to put up posters and bulletins in strategic places at the various Olympic venues; and it will train front-line workers on how to recognize victims of human trafficking, and what to do when they find them.

“In the fall of 2009,” says Venables, “we will start targeting the customers and the victims, and see if we can rescue some victims. We are currently doing that, but [this will be] a concentrated effort, [directed at] the ones who are just coming to town and realizing their predicament. . . . But we’re also going to boldly go after the consumer and suggest there are consequences to what they’re doing, as opposed to having a good time.”

He adds: “The girls aren’t on the street selling themselves. They’re out working, and not by choice. . . . [We’re saying] ‘She didn’t choose you, you chose her — and that’s rape.'”

Going aggressively after the consumers of sex will also be the focus of Resist Exploitation, Embrace Dignity (REED), a Vancouver-based Christian grassroots organization that stands against trafficking and sexual exploitation of women through outreach, advocacy and education. It is developing a campaign called ‘Sex is Not a Sport.’

“We’re going to have posters, postcards, t-shirts, buttons — whatever we can come up with the funding for — to spread the message,” says executive director Michelle Miller. “And anytime we give out information, we’re going to tell them: ‘If you’re going to take this, you have to commit to having at least one conversation about why you’re wearing this item and what this means.'”
It is a message Miller wants to take directly to the churches. “It’s time to show some outrage, and it’s time to stand with the least — and stand with Jesus, through standing with the least.

“And it’s time for truth-telling. Often the buyer is an invisible actor in the equation, but they’re actually driving the market for women’s bodies . . . . We have to start addressing the demand side, or it’s never going away.”

Abetting Canada’s human trafficking problem are lax laws that are sometimes laxly enforced. One of the more egregious examples is the case of Michael Lennox Mark.

In November, a judge in Montreal sentenced Mark to only two years in jail after he pleaded guilty to trafficking a 17 year old girl. “But because he’d served one year in pre-trial custody and was given a two-for-one credit,” Perrin says, “he only had to serve an extra one week in jail after being convicted.”

Smith is determined that such outcomes do not happen again. In January, she introduced in Parliament private member’s bill C-268. It would impose a mandatory minimum five-year prison term on those found guilty of trafficking in persons under the age of 18. Such a penalty, she believes, “is the very least we can do.”

On February 27, C-268 received its first hour of debate. It is scheduled to be debated again for a second and final hour on May 4.

Then MPs will vote on whether to send it to the Commons Justice Committee for in-depth study. If MPs vote no, the bill will die.
“I’m hoping that all parties will be involved in [passing] this. It’s not a partisan thing,” says Smith. “It’s the right thing to do for these innocent victims. It’s the right message to give to people who are trying to traffic children. . . . And it also sends a message to traffickers for the Olympics in 2010.”

Perrin helped Smith in drafting her bill. While much more still needs to be done legislatively to combat human trafficking in Canada, he says, he believes C-268 is nonetheless “a very important step forward.”

“The Supreme Court of Canada has said that mandatory minimum sentences in the Criminal Code, when they are constitutional, are required to be followed, and there are very limited exceptions for when they should be departed from,” he says.

“So the message that Parliament sends by passing C-268 would be to speak directly to sentencing judges and say, ‘We deem these crimes against children to be particularly heinous and justify at least a minimum sentence of five years.'”

Despite the massive threat human trafficking poses to the 2010 Olympics, Venables remains hopeful. With Christians and all people of good will working together, he believes it is a challenge that can be met — and defeated.

“There is an opportunity for Vancouver to really win this,” he says. “We want to inform the visitors that, when they come to Vancouver, they better be here for the Olympics. Because if they’re here for illicit sex, we’re aware of it, and we’re just trying to protect these kids.”